I'm planning on homeschooling my daughter this coming 2006-07 school year. I corrently live in N.Y. I have all the laws for N.Y. Now I'm seriously thinking about moving down to Florida. I have done some research on the internet to find Florida's laws. I'm all confused with it because they seem to have 3 different options. I'm unsure about all of it. I read a lot on the private laws and thought about Crossroads Christian School. It's a private school for homeschooling children. If I go that route do I still have to follow Florida's homeschool laws if I enroll my daughter through them. I just don't understand their laws and we're thinking about moving down in the middle of August. Anyone know of Florida's exact laws. Anything sure would help.

The tutoring option probably isn't what you're looking for, so you only have to choose between homeschool and enrolling your daughter in what is known as an "umbrella school" - a school that charges minimal fees and is only there to fulfill the legal requirements for homeschoolers. Of the two options, the latter is probably going to be easier on you, since you only have to answer to the school, and the school rarely has to supply any information to the school board other than how many students are enrolled. Of course, it will cost somewhat more, and you may or may not have a good umbrella school in your area.

Thank you so much.Do you have an umbrella school that you personally recommend? I'm thinking about crossroads Christian school which is an umbrella school. I've read a little bit about them. They sound like what I need.

I live in Florida and I intend to homeschool my children this year. One of them will be starting kindergarten. Do I still need to write the letter of intent for her? Or is kindergarten only mandatory in public schools?

In all cases, a child turning 6 before February 1 of the school year is subject to compulsory attendance...

As long as your daughter is under the age requirement, you don't have to write a Letter of Intent for her, regardless of what level she's currently at. I'm sure she'll be well past kindergarten by age 6.

My daughter would be entering 2nd grade this year, but she has breezed through 1st, and breezes through 2nd grade workbooks, so I figured I could purchase 3rd grade curricula for her this year. We decided on Alpha Omega, and we first did the diagnostic testing which proved my hunch, so I bought the 3rd grade stuff. But now I'm worried because I heard that I can't just "promote" her to the next grade without an evaluation and proof that she completed 2nd grade. I looked at the fpea website and didn't see anything on this...please tell me I heard wrong.

In the meantime, however, there's no reason why you should be able to work on grade 3 with your daughter. The law says nothing about waiting to move onto the next grade until testing out of the previous grade, just that your daughter has to be able to demonstrate "educational progress at a level commensurate with her ability." I doubt she'll have any trouble with this if she can already handle grade 3 material, especially if you find a friendly evaluator.

If i dont send a letter of intent for my 5 year old daughter that i will be homeschooling ( grade-k) and then when she is homeschooled for 1st grade and i have to send a letter in wont they want her to start as a kindergartener not a 1st grader?
If i send her to a school for 1st grade after i home school her wont they want her to start as a kindergartener or is the proof from the HS program i am using enough?
thanks
megan